I've just failed an audit when I chose "Leave Open" on the following question: https://stackoverflow.com/review/close/8793978
The problem is, IMO, there's little merit in closing a question as "Unclear what you are asking" when it actually has two answers (including one that's accepted) by people who obviously understood the question just fine (the third answer is unclear in whether the poster misunderstood, or simply answered wrong). Not to mention that there's a comment that clarifies the intent further (though I understand that it would be more useful if that were an edit).
Now, I'm pretty sure the "Unclear what you are asking" are the typical close votes for "You didn't show any work of your own" kind of problem. This poses several problems IMO:
- The question isn't actually unclear - so this is a bad flag. It could use some rewording, but that should be handled by an edit rather than a close vote.
- There's no close vote for "SO is not a code writing service". As far as I can tell, the consensus (if any) seems to be that those kind of question should simply be downvoted (as in this case). The close vote seems redundant at best, and wrong at worst.
- The question actually has an accepted answer. Sure, it doesn't sound like an answer that anyone else is ever going ot use, but closing it as unclear seems iffy at best.
How should a case like this be properly handled? Should I add my own close vote which actually addresses the issues of the question? Should I edit the question since the apparent close reason is "Unclear what you are asking" (and in this case, vote for reopening)?